Global, the U.K. media company known for its radio brands like Capital and Heart, is launching a weekly show exclusively for Twitteron Nov. 16. called “PopBuzz Presents,” opening up new revenue streams for the media company.

The 30-minute show will stream each Thursday from Twitter’s London headquarters at 5 p.m. local time, hosted by presenters Lilah Parsons and Will Hardy. The show will consist of three seven-minute segments, featuring discussions around trending stories, guest interviews and games.

While the goal is for people to tune in to the entire show, Global remains realistic that it’s creating a show for people who don’t watch much TV. PopBuzz, Global’s pop culture and music-streaming site — and first non-radio brand — launched three years ago, targeting the 18- to 24-year-old age bracket.

“In the lifetime of PopBuzz, we’ve learned that Twitter is the first place audiences go to get close to the things they really care about, whether that’s celebrities, musicians or politicians,” said Charles Ubaghs, head of social at Global. “Twitter has the scope and scale representative of the whole web. People can make connections with their passion points quickly.”

Social platforms are vying for exclusive content, and Twitter is proving it’s still in the running, despite being unable to compete with Facebook and Google on reach. During August, Twitter had 22 million monthly unique users; in the 18- to 24-year-old age bracket, Twitter had more users than Instagram and Snapchat, according to Global, which cited comScore figures.

Beyond reach, Twitter’s ability to monetize “PopBuzz Presents” was appealing, said James Hickman, Global’s director of digital. As part of a revenue-share deal, Twitter and Global are selling a mix of commercial packages that include pre-roll, mid-roll and sponsorship, a model more closely resembling TV. Global hasn’t announced which brands it’s working with.

“The options for monetization for publishers are clearer and more mature on Twitter than other platforms, partly because they have been doing it for longer,” said Gareth Capon, CEO at video tech platform Grabyo. Twitter has also been quicker than Amazon and Facebook to license sports content.

Twitter’s differentiator is the live element, and it has pushed sponsorships around live video, according to Katie Manor, head of paid social worldwide at MediaCom. According to Manor, sponsorships can range from £25,000 ($33,000) for packages with less reach to north of £500,000 ($658,000), depending on the market and scale of exposure.

“Historically, people have maybe ignored Twitter in favor of Instagram or Snapchat,” Ubaghs said. “In the last year, there’s a realization there’s still a big audience there; there won’t be the scale, but it has a utility and a unique way of selling live video.”